From Affliction to Affirmation: Narrative Transformation and the Therapeutics of Candomblé Mediumship
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Through the presentation and analysis of a prototypical mediumship narrative, this article shows how individuals initiated into the Candomblé religion of north-eastern Brazil come to alter their own self-narratives by learning and internalizing the cultural model for an established social/religious role: that of the medium. As individuals come to identify with this 'role model,' they are able to reinterpret their own life histories in terms of the model's structure and its symbolic content. This article also demonstrates how the social articulation and cognitive internalization of this new self-narrative act therapeutically, to foster a positive transformation in self-understanding that facilitates positive behavior.
Maraldi E, Taves A, Moll J, Hartle L, Moreira-de-Oliveira M, Bortolini T J Relig Health. 2023; 63(1):410-444.
PMID: 37507577 DOI: 10.1007/s10943-023-01875-8.
Dupuis D Front Psychol. 2021; 12:730031.
PMID: 34887799 PMC: 8651242. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.730031.
Cardena E, Schaffler Y Ethos. 2019; 46(4):457-476.
PMID: 31057191 PMC: 6477824. DOI: 10.1111/etho.12216.
A physiological examination of perceived incorporation during trance.
Wahbeh H, Cannard C, Okonsky J, Delorme A F1000Res. 2019; 8:67.
PMID: 30815253 PMC: 6384530. DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.17157.2.
Transformation in Dang-ki Healing: The Embodied Self and Perceived Legitimacy.
Lee B Cult Med Psychiatry. 2016; 40(3):422-49.
PMID: 27138277 DOI: 10.1007/s11013-016-9497-4.